Rashid’s Blog: 2014 in review

Another year is closing.Some good and some bad memories are there. I treasure both good and bad. The WordPress.com stats helper monkeys have prepared a 2013 annual report for this blog. Here it is. Thanks to all the readers to make the journey so special.

This blog was viewed about 200,000times in 2014. The busiest day of the year was November 11th with 1,083 views. The most popular post that day was Natural Resources: Definition and Classification.Click on the image to seethe animated fun report.

Click here to see the complete report.

Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment

Christmas-themed Mughal miniatures from the courts of Akbar and Jehangir Used for Image Building!!!

Jesuits came to the Mughal court hoping to convert the emperors. Instead, the Indian rulers used Christian images for their own royal propaganda (akin to the Image building)

See more pictures and description here.

See more pics and Desc Jehangir and Jesus. Hashim, Jehangir, c. 1615-1620. Abu’l-Hasan. Photo credit: Chester Beatty Library, Dublin.

Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment

TOP 10 DELHI RULING CLANS

udairawal's avatartheamazingud

delhi

This timeline was made by Vikramjit Singh Rooprai and sent to me by my mother. It shows how we don’t remember some who were here for a long time and know those who didn’t rule for long. I don’t think many will know these facts so I posted it.

View original post

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Is Our Urban Realm is Turning into a Big Slum?

We’re not just talking about poor people living in classic shantytowns on the peripheries of Global South cities, but living on rooftops, in filled-in airwells in the centre of buildings; in cages of wire netting erected to protect their few belongings; on pavements; in former graveyards (>1 million people in Cairo); on swamps, floodplains, volcano slopes, unstable hillsides, rubbish mountains, chemical dumps, railroad sidings, desert fringes……

    –The new urban precariat (as opposed to proletariat)

According to UN,there will be, nearly 5 billion urban dwellers in year 2030 .sixty percent people will live in cities .Biggest increase will be in Asia and Africa – poorest, least-urbanised, least able to cope .

By 2017: nearly 500 cities ofwill be of million plus population.

By 2025, 8 cities 20m+ – Tokyo, Mumbai, Manila, Dhaka, São Paulo, Mexico City, New York, and Kolkata.

In 2005 the number of slum dwellers worldwide exceeded 1 billion (one third of the world’s urban population).

In Ethiopia, Chad, Afghanistan and Nepal: 90%+ of urban dwellers live in slums.

78.2% of the urban population of the world’s least developed countries live in slums.

Mumbai is the global capital of slum dwelling (between 10 and 12 million people, with 1 million living on pavements)

The poorest urban populations are in Luanda, Maputo and Kinshasa, where child mortality (under 5) exceeds 320 per 1000.

One quarter of the world’s urban population live in absolute poverty (“a condition characterised by severe deprivation of basic human needs, including food, safe drinking water, sanitation facilities, health, shelter, education and information.” WHO, 1995).

Unless massive action is taken, by 2030 there will be 2 billion slum dwellers worldwide, and half of all urban dwellers will live in poverty.

Today we are seeing dramatic urban growth without economic growth – no investment, no jobs, shrinking public sector, soaring cost of land/living. Why are people moving?

People move for the opportunity, if not the job. There is always somebody, 1 in 100, 1 in 1000, 1 in 10,000, who has made it. The alternative is subsistence agriculture – which runs the risk of starvation, or eviction by commercial agriculture/mechanization, or devastation by climate change.

Other factors: people are displaced by wars and become refugees; ‘natural’ disasters.

It is Almost impossible now to tell where city ends and the countryside begins – in many parts of the Global South, people no longer have to move to the city; the city is growing so fast it moves to them.

Echoes Henri Lefebvre (1968) in La Revolution Urbaine, argued that urbanization had supplanted industrialization as the major vehicle of capital accumulation throughout the world, to the point where we could one day see “the complete urbanization of the world.”

Natural Increase is Becoming an ever-increasing factor in slum expansion (now surpassing rural to urban migration).

Rate of growth of births over deaths in slums is increasing the population by tens of thousands of people every year.

P.S-> These points are collected in my research for urban realm. I am putting them here for you all to think and ponder.


Posted in opinions, Urban Studies | Tagged | 7 Comments